TPC Scottsdale Stadium finishing stretch near the grandstands

Best Golf Courses in Scottsdale for First‑Time Visitors

🏷️ Custom Packages • Tee Times + Lodging LinksUpGolf.com

Desert golf reveals itself in layers. First you see the color—greens suspended in sand and stone. Then you feel the air, thin and dry, carrying sound a beat longer across fairways guarded by saguaro. Finally, the rhythm arrives. A straightforward opener, a decision at the short four, a big view when the round needs a breath. This guide is how to find that rhythm on your very first Scottsdale trip.

What your first trip should feel like

Think momentum, not mileage. Your opener should teach you how Scottsdale asks for angles and commit you to desert carries without punishing first‑day swings. Day two should be the headliner—the postcard holes, the camera out at the turn, the one your group chose when the idea of Arizona first came up. Day three brings joy and proximity: a course near where you’re staying so your last putt rolls toward a patio and a toast.

The good news: you can get this feeling without guesswork. Scottsdale clusters world‑class golf within short rides. With Links Up, we secure the morning tee times, anchor lodging near your day‑two and day‑three routes, and leave the afternoons open for slow lunches and Old Town walks.

Boulders framing Troon North Monument
Monument at Troon North: granite, sky, and confident lines
We-Ko-Pa Saguaro fairway with mountains
We‑Ko‑Pa Saguaro: walkable flow and wide‑angle views

A 3‑day routing that just works

Day 1: Learn the shapes, keep the ball moving

Fly in, drop bags, and head for a course that puts you in the desert without wringing you out. McDowell Mountain and Kierland are perfect teachers—clean visuals, honest yardages, and greens that reward a committed pace. You’ll meet your first carry and your first bounce‑hard‑right fairway and realize: this is less about power and more about choosing a side.

Afternoon plan: tacos, a pool hour, and an early walk through Old Town. The desert sets up best when you keep the first night easy.

Day 2: The headliner, the story, the photos

This is where the trip becomes a memory. Pick your flavor: the We‑Ko‑Pa duo for unbroken Sonoran views; Troon North Monument for boulder‑drama lines; or TPC Scottsdale Stadium for a brush with the most famous amphitheater in golf. The holes look big because the sky is big. Play early. Desert mornings are calm, and the shadows on the ridges make every approach look like a magazine spread.

Day 3: Finish close, finish smiling

End near where you’re staying so the last putt flows straight into lunch. Camelback Padre, Grayhawk Talon, or Papago give you plenty to remember without beating you up. Rotate pairings, set a friendly quota game, and leave one swing for the desert air on the final tee.

Quick‑pick first‑timer routes
  • Classic Desert Drama: McDowell Mountain → Troon North Monument → Grayhawk Talon
  • View‑Hungry Walkers: Kierland → We‑Ko‑Pa Saguaro → Papago
  • Bucket‑List Energy: McDowell Mountain → TPC Scottsdale Stadium → Camelback Padre

Prefer we lock this in for you?

Scottsdale must‑plays for first‑timers

We‑Ko‑Pa — Saguaro

The desert the way purists picture it: no houses, just routing that rides the land. Saguaro moves like a hike you’d brag about—up over a shoulder, down through a saddle, and across fairways that ask for angles more than heroics. Miss small, and the course offers a second chance from firm‑but‑fair surrounds.

We‑Ko‑Pa — Cholla

Cholla paints the same mountain backdrop with sharper brushstrokes. Carries feel a half‑club longer, and the par threes play like postcard checks on your swing. Pairing Saguaro then Cholla gives you the full We‑Ko‑Pa vocabulary in one day.

We-Ko-Pa Cholla desert carry
Cholla: the bolder sibling with carries that focus the mind
Grayhawk Raptor green against desert backdrop
Grayhawk Raptor: tournament teeth, fair if you choose lines

Troon North — Monument

The holes feel carved rather than built. Granite piles become aiming points; fairways bend around stone in ways that make sense to your eye. It’s the course your camera loves. Play to the fat side, take your medicine, and enjoy the walk between the rocks.

TPC Scottsdale — Stadium

Famous for one hole, memorable for many. The stadium finish compresses everything great about desert golf—clean visuals, precise targets, and room to bail short‑right if pride allows. You’ll step on 16 and think of the roar; you’ll walk off 18 thinking about how much fun the preceding 15 were.

Grayhawk — Talon

Talon gives first‑timers an ideal Scottsdale thesis: favor position over length, accept that firm is fair, and try to land approaches on the front third. The par‑five options make for friendly group games, and the clubhouse scene keeps the mood easy after the round.

Great alternatives & value plays

Papago

Phoenix‑close with mountain teeth. The ground game matters here—landing short can be smarter than flag hunting. Ideal for a last‑day round before flights.

Camelback — Padre

Tree‑lined breaks in the desert panorama and a kinder test when the group wants to swing free. Centrally located and perfect for groups mixing skill levels.

McDowell Mountain

Wide enough to exhale, solid enough to keep you honest. If you’re nervous about desert carries, this is the course that trades anxiety for rhythm.

Kierland

Resort‑smooth with good angles and an easy arrival. Grab morning times, enjoy the firm fairways, and let putts die on the high side.

Papago course with buttes
Papago: butte‑backdrops and smart ground contours
Camelback Padre fairway and trees
Camelback Padre: a gentler finish close to dining

Where to stay (first‑timer edition)

Old Town Scottsdale: Walkable dinners and short rides to Papago, Camelback, TPC, and Grayhawk. If your group values patios and people‑watching, base here.

North Scottsdale: Quiet nights, big skies, and quicker hops to Troon North, Boulders, and We‑Ko‑Pa. Choose this if the golf is the star and evenings are more about a fireplace than a late night.

Desert golf tips for first‑timers

  • Club selection: The air is thin—most players see a half‑club of added carry. Trust it, but respect the bounce.
  • Angles over brute force: Side‑of‑fairway choices change approach windows by 20–30 yards. Pick a side and commit.
  • Greens are firm: Land it front‑edge to feed to middle pins. Spin is insurance, not a plan.
  • Hydrate early: You won’t feel sweat in the dry air. One bottle before the turn, one after, minimum.
  • Morning tee times: Cooler, calmer, prettier. They also buy you a slow lunch and no rush into the evening.
Ready to turn this into a real itinerary

Explore Arizona golf packages or browse the full map at Golf Destinations USA. We’ll secure morning times, align lodging with your day‑two and day‑three routes, and hold backup options so your plan breathes.

Build your package

Tell us your group size, dates, and whether the headline should be Monument boulders, We‑Ko‑Pa vistas, or the Stadium finish. We’ll shape the days, handle release windows, and put you a short ride from dinner.